Eugenics

Eugenics is about breeding better plants, animals or people which seems thoroughly sensible. We have no compunction about trying this with plants and animals. When it comes to people it is not so simple. There was an enthusiasm for it in the Nineteenth Century and the Twentieth Century. Then it all went wrong and now we do not talk about it. It is almost completely taboo.

Adolf and his peculiar friends got involved and tried out some of their ideas. This was very much the kiss of death for the subject. It is something that the Germans are still trying to live down and something that has made them a soft touch for various extortionists, especially those who live in the Stolen Land which they call Israel.

Now we have a view, a very readable one from Fred, a man of good sense - The Inevitability Of Eugenics

Another is Funny Thing A Century Ago, Eugenics Was The Elite Consensus—Just Like Critical Race Theory Is Now, by Edward Dutton - The Unz Review. The RationalWiki wrote a very hostile article about Edward Dutton. It makes no pretence of being unbiased. Believe as much of it as you will. Some of the unz.com commentators sound dubious about him.

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin was a Jesuit and Believer.
QUOTE
On April 10, 1955 — Easter Sunday — Pierre Teilhard de Chardin collapsed and died of a heart attack in a friend’s Manhattan apartment. He was 74 and had done nothing more strenuous that day than take a stroll through Central Park. At this time Teilhard was known mainly as a paleontologist and geologist, albeit one who also produced some odd and controversial theological writings.
UNQUOTE
He is now persona non grata.

 The New Statesman decided to come clean, to name names, to accuse the enthusiasts - see The eugenics movement Britain wants to forget. It manages not to notice Jews who were part of it. It also published When America believed in eugenics & When the disabled were segregated.

#Eugenic Perpetrators
Some of the enthusiasts are named; the usual mob of Quasi-Intellectual patter merchants. You might be interested in what Jonathan Freedland, a Jew has to tell us about  Eugenics, The Skeleton That Rattles Loudest In The Left's Closet, writing in The Guardian.

The reverse of eugenics is Dysgenics. The Metapedia tells us about it - see Pessimism Regarding The Future Of Western Civilization. Recall that Bill Shockley, the inventor of the transistor wrote about the problem & got monstrous abuse from Hard Left agitators for his pains.

Here are some books on the subject from a reading list compiled by Michael Crichton for State of Fear, his book on Global Warming. His view is that eugenics went badly wrong, proving that a consensus among people who think of themselves as an intellectual elite can well be wrong. I am going to read my way over the ground before having a definite view. BTW Doctor Crichton was a qualified as a medical man who taught then did anthropology. Edwin Black is a Jew, propagandist and  subversive with an agenda [ see War Against the Weak  by Edwin Black ].
PS Read the first source first.

Jews Were Big In Eugenics As Well As Ethnic Cleansing [ 15th May 2009 ]
QUOTE
In 1944, psychiatrist Kurt Levinstein gave a lecture at a Tel Aviv conference, where he advocated preventing people with various mental and neurological disorders - such as alcoholism, manic depression and epilepsy - from bringing children into the world. The means he proposed - prohibition of marriage, contraception, abortion and sterilization - were acceptable in Europe and the United States in the first decades of the 20th century, within the framework of eugenics: the science aimed at improving the human race. In the 1930s, the Nazis used these same methods in the early stages of their plan to strengthen the Aryan race. Levinstein was aware, of course, of the dubious political connotations implicit in his recommendations, but believed the solid and salutary principles of eugenics could be isolated from their use by the Nazis.
UNQUOTE
Eugenics are very awful, we are told. Jews were very much part of it. Now they call it Ethnic Cleansing. Honest men call it Genocide.
PS Jews control immigration policy. That is Ethnic Fouling or Cultural Genocide.
PPS The source for this piece is Haaretz, a newspaper owned by Jews, published by Jews, written by Jews bought by Jews in Occupied Palestine, the Stolen Land that Jews took from the Palestinians.

 

Jews and Eugenics
Of course they were at the forefront. Now of course they pretend it is awful and nothing to do with them.

 

Eugenics And Its Advocates
There are names there that propagandists do not mention.

 


Black, Edwin
War Against the Weak- Eugenics and America's Campaign to Create a Master Race Four Walls
Mr Black is a journalist and a Jew [ probability > 99% ] albeit he doesn't bother to tell us, with an agenda [ probability > 99% ] who has a hostile view of various people in the eugenics movement. His book seems to be using facts. Character assassination can use facts and suppress others. This does not mean that it is honest. Mr Black has nothing to say about the eugenics movement operating in Palestine, the Stolen Land called Israel. It uses a system of murder, rape torture, starvation, sabotage and ethnic cleansing against the owners of that unfortunate land. Nor does he tell us about the anti-eugenics movement, the Ethnic Fouling In America, which is flooding America and Christendom with Third World free loaders. His claim that genetics are not science is absurd. It may not be fully understood but it is science none the less. Some one else is not impressed by Mr Black's offering. See War Against the Weak for a very critical review.

Edwin Black, Jew And Propagandist
QUOTE
Edwin Black, War against the Weak: Eugenics and America’s Campaign to Create a Master Race, Four Walls Eight Windows, New York 2003, 592 pp., hardcover, $27
War against the Weak is a much-heralded attempt to make the American eugenics movement of the early twentieth century the direct inspiration for Hitler’s euthanasia program, if not the fanciful gas chambers of Auschwitz. Unfortunately, the journalistic weaknesses of superficiality, exaggeration, and partisanship that Black displayed in his earlier IBM and the Holocaust and The Transfer Agreement are just as evident in War against the Weak. Black’s impressive rosters of American supporters of eugenics and depressing catalogues of coercive state measures against the helpless can be found in such standard works as Kevles’s In the Name of Eugenics – minus his flawed interpretation of the eugenics movement in general and U.S. and German eugenic policies in particular.
UNQUOTE
I was dubious about Black even before I knew he was a Jew. Now I am certain. He is a Jew. He lies. QED.
Further he was written up as an unscrupulous liar with an agenda at Edwin Black’s The Transfer Agreement , by Spencer J. Quinn in The Unz Review.

 

Ute Deichmann [ Jew ]
Biologists under Hitler Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press 1996 - heavy going - not amusing.

 

Wendy Kline [ historian ]
Building a Better Race- Gender, Sexuality, and Eugenics from the Turn of the Century to the Baby Boom Berkley California: University of California Press 2001 - feminist? Zionist controlled source.

 

Stefan Kühl [ German ]
The Nazi Connection- Eugenics, American Racism, and German National Socialism New York: Oxford University Press, 1994

 

Levack, Brian P
The Witch-Hunt in Early Modern Europe Second Edition. London Longman, 1995 - educated people swallowed this one - just like the racism racket today.

 

Ernst Mayr
Was a biologist and a very decent man. He says eugenics cannot work with man but Cultural Genocide can.

 

Matt Nuenke
Sound sort of man with good background.

 

Max Nuenke's Mission Statement
QUOTE
Anyone who is familiar with the United Nations, NATO, the European Economic Union, and the New World Order knows that we are on the brink of giving up national sovereignty for world totalitarianism, where a central committee will dictate to the masses how to think and behave. We see this happening now in Afghanistan and Iraq, where the United States has decided that it can attack any nation that harbors terrorists, of course forgetting that terrorism is how states often come into existence.  I advocate two primary future viable options for eugenics: a return to nationalism, where competing nations will experiment with various social and scientific agendas to raise their peoples to higher levels of intelligence, followed by other traits the population desires to promote; and/or, to increase group solidarity and practice eugenics without borders. The second one has been practiced by Jews for thousands of years, but it can be a dangerous road to follow for it invariably leads to group conflict in the nations where Jews dominate. Much of my writing has to do therefore not with the technology of eugenics but with human nature and how we react as competing groups.
UNQUOTE
So many of the world's problems seem to lead back to the Jews.

 

Ordover, Nancy
American Eugenics- Race, Queer Anatomy, and the Science of Nationalism Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 2003 - heavy going - blames left and right. Her background? Dubious.

 

Other Sources

Passing of the Great Race, Or, the Racial Basis of European History - Bobbit 1936
QUOTE
Madison Grant's Passing of The Great Race was not very scientific, although many scientists at the time did support Grant's main claims. However, on a cultural level, one can see how peoples of northern ancestry tend to be of a stringer [ sic ] will than those of southern ancestry. Grant makes good arguments for Nordic superiority, using mostly recorded history rather than prehistoric anthropology. What I like about this book is that in it Grant warns of impending extinction of white Americans, especially those of colonial stock, as a result of unchecked immigration. Today it is relevant, although the problem has switched from Jews and Italians to Mexicans and other Hispanics. Grant also makes a good argument for eugenics.
UNQUOTE
Edwin Black, the author of War Against the Weak- Eugenics and America's Campaign to Create a Master Race disapproves of this book and all other advocates of eugenics.

 

The Rising Tide Of Color Against White World-supremacy - Grant 1926
QUOTE
A reprint of a 1920 classic surveying the world racial situation after World War I and warning of the coming non-White population explosion. "The world-wide struggle between the primary races of mankind...bids fair to be the fundamental problem of the 20th century, and...perhaps the future." 
UNQUOTE
A lot of Englishmen would say that he is right. So would millions of Americans. What greatly exacerbates the situation is our rulers' enthusiasm for importing them by the million. Whose agenda are they following? Not ours for sure.

 

Carnegie Institution of Washington
QUOTE
"A non-profit scientific research organization specializing in the physical and biological sciences."
UNQUOTE
They are working in biology among other things. One of their men got a Nobel Prize which means that he is better than amateur.

 

Alexis Carrel - Eugenicist
QUOTE
(t)he conditioning of petty criminals with the whip, or some more scientific procedure, followed by a short stay in hospital, would probably suffice to insure order. Those who have murdered, robbed while armed with automatic pistol or machine gun, kidnapped children, despoiled the poor of their savings, misled the public in important matters, should be humanely and economically disposed of in small euthanasic institutions supplied with proper gasses. A similar treatment could be advantageously applied to the insane, guilty of criminal acts.".
UNQUOTE
Some of his ideas sound rather brutal but killing off those who rob the poor could and should include rapacious tax men. Brown, Her Majesty's Chancellor of the Her Exchequer would be an excellent start. He covers corrupt politicians too.

 

Charles Davenport
Was big in biology and eugenics. He seems to have been prone to make claims that went beyond the evidence.

 

Eugenics Record Office
Was where it all happened.

 

Harry Laughlin
The Wikipedia doesn't approve of him. He does not sound awfully nice. Being endorsed by the Nazis is not a good public relations move.

 

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Was home to the Eugenics Record Office. It is in Long Island, New York.

 

F. Hoyt Pilcher
Ran the Kansas State Asylum  for Idiotic and Imbecile Youth. Nobody was beating about the bush here. He sterilized them to prevent them from breeding. This does not go down awfully well except in Israel where state brutality is normal.

 

Eugenics in the United States - Valone report on the Human Betterment Foundation
This is another hostile source.

 

https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2017/02/22/the-true-story-behind-the-marie-stopes-eugenics-trial-of-1923/

The True Story Behind The Marie Stopes Eugenics Trial Of 1923
Did the BBC lie to us? Of course; it is a corrupt Marxist propaganda machine.
QUOTE
In the 1920s, a legal victory against the rising eugenic tide was won by a Catholic doctor over prominent birth control advocate Marie Stopes. While Stopes is lauded today as a feminist hero, the story of the eugenics libel trial has been largely overlooked.

Editor’s note: This is the first of two articles on the >Stopes v. Sutherland libel trial. The second article can be read here.

In 1923 in Britain, a Catholic doctor won an important victory in the battle against one of the most harmful ideologies of the 20th century: eugenics. The battle was fought in the law courts when British birth control advocate Marie Stopes sued Dr. Halliday Sutherland for libel.

Had Sutherland lost the case, opposition to eugenics in Britain would have suffered a blow, and would possibly have been silenced altogether. Sutherland’s success was in large part because he was supported by the most consistently vociferous critic of eugenics in Britain at that time: the Catholic Church. But having won the legal battle, Sutherland subsequently lost the history war when the narrative of the losing side became the received history.

It is time to correct the record and, what’s more, demonstrate why it matters today. Recent developments in biotechnology mean that eugenics is back. The issues in Stopes v. Sutherland are still relevant today and, when the centenaries of past events are commemorated in the next few years, it is essential that the correct narrative is used to influence the contemporary debate.

The centenary in 2023 of the Stopes v. Sutherland trial will be an opportunity to challenge the falsehoods of the last 100 years. Catholics can reflect on the Church’s record of standing up for ordinary people against the master plan of the elites. Remembering these events will help to educate and inspire those who will take up the cause in the contemporary debate.

“Fake histories are warehouses to store fake news.”     
There’s lots of “fake news” around these days, isn’t there? This article is about one of the sources of fake news—fake history.

Here’s an example from the BBC’s online biography of Marie Stopes:

In 1921, Stopes opened a family planning clinic in Holloway, north London, the first in the country. It offered a free service to married women and also gathered data about contraception. In 1925, the clinic moved to central London and others opened across the country. By 1930, other family planning organisations had been set up and they joined forces with Stopes to form the National Birth Control Council (later the Family Planning Association).

The Catholic church was Stopes’ fiercest critic. In 1923, Stopes sued Catholic doctor Halliday Sutherland for libel. She lost, won at appeal and then lost again in the House of Lords, but the case generated huge publicity for Stopes’ views.

Stopes continued to campaign for women to have better access to birth control…

A second example of “fake history” is a 2015 press release from Marie Stopes International celebrating the 90th anniversary of the establishment of Stopes’ second London clinic:

90 years ago a woman called Marie Stopes made an extraordinary decision. She would open a service in the heart of London that offered women access to free contraception. In 1925, three years before women would win the right to vote, Marie Stopes bucked convention by showing women they had a choice regarding whether and when to have children.

On what grounds do I say that these items are “fake”?  In my opinion, they are fake because of what they leave out.

There is no mention of Stopes’ eugenic agenda or of her intention to achieve, in her own words, “a reduction of the birth rate at the wrong part and increase of the birth rate at the right end of the social scale.”

No mention of her view that, as she put it in 1924:

From the point of view of the economics of the nation, it is racial madness to rifle the pockets of the thrifty and intelligent who are struggling to do their best for their own families of one and two and squander the money on low grade mental deficients, the spawn of drunkards, the puny families of women so feckless and deadened that they apathetically breed like rabbits.

No mention was made that she advocated the compulsorily sterilization of the “unfit,” nor of her lobbying the British Prime Minister and the Parliament to pass the appropriate legislation.

No mention of the vituperative language she used to describe those whom she desired to see sterilized: “hopelessly bad cases, bad through inherent disease, or drunkenness or character” …“wastrels, the diseased…the miserable [and] the criminal”…“degenerate, feeble minded and unbalanced”…“parasites.”

No mention is made of the “bedrock” tenets of the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress, set up by Stopes to run her clinics: “to furnish security from conception to those who are racially diseased, already overburdened with children, or in any specific way unfitted for parenthood.”

No reasons were given as to why the doctor opposed her. Dr. Sutherland opposed Stopes because he opposed eugenics. His opposition began many years before, when he was nominally a Presbyterian and in practice an atheist.

No mention was made of the fact that Dr. Sutherland specialized in tuberculosis, an infective disease of poverty. This fact is key, because it brought him into direct conflict with eugenicists (more commonly known at the time as “eugenists”). Eugenists believed that susceptibility to tuberculosis was primarily an inherited condition, so their “cure” was to breed out the tuberculous types. While Sutherland and others were trying to prevent and cure tuberculosis, influential eugenists believed their efforts were a waste of time. Furthermore, these eugenists thought tuberculosis was a “friend of the race” because it was a natural check on the unfit, killing them before they could reproduce.

Of course, both the BBC biography and the press release are brief summaries and, as such, cannot include all of the details that I have outlined. But that’s not the point. The point is that neither item properly summarizes the issues. The excision of Stopes’ eugenic agenda makes her a secular saint. How could anyone oppose her in good conscience?

And that’s the question that brought me to where I am now. As a grandson of Dr. Sutherland, I often wondered why he opposed her, because I used to believe the fake version of this story myself. No one—family or otherwise—told me differently. Following many hours of research, including the examination of Dr. Sutherland’s personal papers, I now know a different version of events.

Who was Halliday Sutherland?          
Halliday Gibson Sutherland was born in 1882, and was educated at Glasgow High School and Merchiston Castle School, Edinburgh. He studied medicine at Edinburgh and Aberdeen, and he graduated in 1908. At that time, he came under the influence of Robert Philip, who pioneered modern anti-tuberculosis treatments.

Tuberculosis was responsible for one-ninth of the total death-rate in Britain at the time. Tuberculosis killed over 70,000 victims, and disabled at least 150,000 more each year. Given that the disease often killed the bread-winner of a family, it was “the direct cause of one-eleventh of the pauperism in England and Wales, a charge on the State of one million sterling per annum,” Sutherland wrote in 1911.

In 1910, Sutherland was appointed the Medical Officer for the St. Marylebone Dispensary for the Prevention of Tuberculosis. In 1911, he edited and contributed to a book on tuberculosis by international experts.

Sutherland’s religious journey is pertinent to this story. He was baptized a Presbyterian. In August 1904, at the age of 22, he was “in theory an agnostic and in practice an atheist,” he would later write. Ten years later, “there came the hazards of war, and for me the time had come when it was expedient to make my peace with God.” At that point he was admitted to the Church of Scotland. He became a Catholic in 1919.

The birth rate, Malthusianism, and eugenics
Also relevant to this story is the falling birth rate, and two groups which had strong views about population.

Britain’s birth rate increased from 1800 onwards. In 1876, it peaked at 36.3 per thousand, and began to fall. By the end of 1901 it had fallen 21 percent, and by nearly 34 percent by 1914.

Not everyone was worried about the fall in birth-rate; one group in particular, the Malthusians, welcomed the fall.

It was T.R. Malthus (1766-1834) who had observed: “The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man.”

He drew up his “natural law,” that when the population increased beyond subsistence, the resulting competition for resources would lead to conflict, famine, and disease. Sexual abstinence was the way to keep the population at manageable levels. In the period of the Stopes v. Sutherland libel trial, the term “Neo-Malthusian” was used to differentiate Malthusians who advocated the use of contraceptives instead of abstinence.

Another group keenly interested in population were the eugenists. The word “eugenics” was coined by Sir Francis Galton, cousin of the naturalist Charles Darwin. But while the word was new, the idea was not; G.K. Chesterton described it as “one of the most ancient follies of the earth.”

In the decades before the Stopes v. Sutherland libel trial, eugenists were concerned about the “differential birth rate,” so-called because the poor were producing more children than the rich. Given that British eugenists used social class as a proxy for a person’s racial fitness, it was clear that the worst “stocks” would be the progenitors of Britain’s future population. For this reason, British eugenists fretted about “degeneration” and “race suicide.”

While there was rivalry between the Malthusian League and the Eugenics Education Society, and they differed strongly over the use of contraceptives, both groups agreed that in relation to population, quality mattered. The areas of overlap meant that some people were members of both the League and the Society. One such person was Marie Stopes.

Sutherland’s opposition to eugenics     
The reader of this article might assume that doctors cure diseases; this, however, was not always a pressing concern for some influential minds in medicine and science at the beginning of the 20th century, particularly in relation to tuberculosis.

Sir James Barr, president of the British Medical Association (“BMA”), provides an excellent example of the attitude of many of those in the medical establishment of the time. At the BMA’s annual conference in Liverpool in 1912, Barr was explicit that “moral and physical degenerates should not be allowed to take any part in adding to the race.” He then he turned his attention to tuberculosis:

If we could only abolish the tubercle bacillus in these islands we would get rid of tuberculous disease, but we should at the same time raise up a race peculiarly susceptible to this infection—a race of hothouse plants which would not flourish in any other environment. …  Nature, on the other hand, weeds out those who have not got the innate power of recovery from disease, and by means of the tubercle bacillus and other pathogenic organisms she frequently does this before the reproductive age, so that a check is put on the multiplication of idiots and the feeble-minded. Nature’s methods are thus of advantage to the race rather than to the individual.

Sutherland’s opposition to this mindset and to eugenics can be traced to the article “The Soil and the Seed in Tuberculosis,” published in the British Medical Journal on November 23, 1912. In it, he recognised that doctors had traditionally believed in an “inherited disposition” to tuberculosis, and admitted that he had been one of them. Now he had changed his mind.

Sutherland again spoke out against eugenics on September 4, 1917, when he addressed the National Council of the YMCA. He rebutted the notion that consumption was hereditary, and he attacked the eugenists:

But why should you set out to prevent this infection and to cure the disease? There are some self-styled eugenists…who declaim that the prevention of disease is not in itself a good thing. They say the efficiency of the State is based upon what they call “the survival of the fittest.” [World War I] has smashed their rhetorical phrase. Who talks now about survival of the fittest, or thinks himself fit because he survives? I don’t know what they mean. I do know that in preventing disease you are not preserving the weak, but conserving the strong.

His disagreement with eugenists, previously on medical and scientific grounds, was now on ethical and moral grounds as well.

Married Love     
In March 1918, Marie Stopes’ book Married Love was published, became a bestseller, and made her a celebrity. According to biographer June Rose:

Marie had written Married Love for women like herself, educated middle-class wives who had been left ignorant of the physical side of marriage. Her tone in her book and in the letters of advice sent to readers implied that they shared a community of interests and of income. She had no particular interest in the lower classes and in Wise Parenthood had written censoriously of the “less thrifty and conscientious” who bred rapidly and produced children “weakened and handicapped by physical as well as mental warping and weakness.” “The lower classes were,” she wrote in a letter to the Leicester Daily Post, “often thriftless, illiterate and careless.”

It was in her other books that the eugenic agenda was more clearly expressed. In Radiant Motherhood, she urged the compulsory sterilization of “wastrels, the diseased…the miserable…the criminal.”

Stopes and her husband opened the “Mother’s Clinic” in Marlborough Road, Holloway on March 17, 1921. She established the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress to run the clinic.  She engaged eminent people as vice-presidents of her society, including Bertrand Russell, H.G. Wells, John Maynard Keynes, and Sir James Barr.

Birth Control       
On July 7, 1921, Sutherland attended a talk at the Medico-Legal Society by Dr. Louise McIlroy, professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and first female professor at the Royal Free Hospital. In the discussion that followed her presentation, McIlroy addressed the negative physical effects of contraceptives. Sutherland, by this time a Catholic, wrote an article in which he observed that the medical profession now concurred with Catholic doctrine. The editor of The Month, in which the article appeared, suggested that he develop it into a book.

Sutherland wrote Birth Control: A Statement of Christian Doctrine Against the Neo-Malthusians. Despite the title, the book was very political and it described Malthusianism as “an attack on the poor.” It was a polemic for the fair treatment of the poor, and for an equitable structure in society to share the abundance of wealth. His conclusion foreshadows the demographic problems that developed nations face today:

The Catholic Church has never taught that “an avalanche of children” should be brought into the world regardless of the consequences. God is not mocked; as men sow, so shall they reap, and against a law of nature both the transient amelioration wrought by philanthropists and the subtle expediences of scientific politicians are alike futile. If our civilisation is to survive we must abandon those ideals that lead to decline.

The libel suit

In Birth Control, under the heading “Exposing the Poor to Experiment,” Sutherland wrote:

But, owing to their poverty, lack of learning, and helplessness, the poor are natural victims of those who seek to make experiments on their fellows. In the midst of a London slum a woman, who is a doctor of German philosophy (Munich), has opened a Birth Control Clinic, where working women are instructed in a method of contraception described by Professor McIlroy as “the most harmful method of which I have had experience.” When we remember that millions are being spent by the Ministry of Health and by Local Authorities—on pure milk for necessitous expectant and nursing mothers before and after childbirth, for the provision of skilled midwives, and on Infant Welfare Centres—all for the single purpose of bringing healthy children into our midst, it is truly amazing this monstrous campaign of birth control should be tolerated by the Home Secretary.

Shortly after the book was published on March 27, 1922, Humphrey Roe, Stopes’ husband, wrote to Sutherland inviting him to publicly debate his wife. Sutherland did not respond to the letter, and a month later, he received a writ for libel.
UNQUOTE
Useful Idiots should be treated with contempt, especially when they claim that they have superior intellects.

 

Stopes v. Sutherland The legal battle between a eugenicist and a Catholic doctor
QUOTE
The true story of Marie Stopes’ libel suit against Dr. Halliday Sutherland is instructive for those fighting today’s eugenicists. 


(Left) Marie Stopes in her laboratory in 1904 (image via Wikipedia); (right) Dr. Halliday Sutherland in 1910 (image via hallidaysutherland.com).

Editor’s Note: This is the second and final article on the Stopes v. Sutherland libel trial of 1923. The first article discussed the background of the case, including UK birth-control advocate Marie Stopes’ enthusiastic interest in eugenics and Dr. Halliday Sutherland’s opposition to that movement, based both on his Catholic faith and on his work with tuberculosis, a disease seen by many eugenists of the day as a “friend of the race” because it was a natural check on the “unfit.” When Sutherland published his book Birth Control in 1922, he accused Stopes’ of using her work distributing contraceptives among poor women as a eugenic experiment targeting society’s most vulnerable. In response, Stopes sued Sutherland for libel.

The court battle       
Sutherland faced huge obstacles. His first problem was money: he quickly ran out of it and planned to defend himself. However, a friend approached Cardinal Bourne of Westminster and shortly afterward Sutherland received a message that Bourne would “stand by him to the end” and assist him with legal costs.

Sutherland’s second problem was that his defense of “justification” would require him to demonstrate that, while the statements he had made about Marie Stopes were defamatory, they were true in substance and in fact.

Stopes engaged Mr. Patrick Hastings, KC, who planned the route to a win for the plaintiff. In Hastings’ opening speech, Stopes was depicted as an eminent scientist providing contraceptives and advice to help her overburdened and poorer sisters. He did not mention her eugenic agenda. Sutherland’s claims that she was experimenting on the poor would be exposed for what they were, Hastings said: a violent attack on dignity of this charitable woman’s good works and on those who did not agree with the tenets of the Catholic faith.

Both sides called witnesses who were, as Hastings pointed out in his opening speech, “known throughout the length and breadth of the civilized world.” The eminence of the witnesses on one side cancelled out those on the other.

The defense would counter that the devices advocated by Stopes were unreliable and dangerous, and that her work with the poor amounted to experimenting on the vulnerable. Her publisher had been accused of publishing an obscene work, so they would portray Stopes’ books as being likely to corrupt young and impressionable people.

How and why did the defense win? In my opinion, there were four main factors, namely, the testimony of Stopes herself, the testimony of Professor McIlroy, the role played by the “gold pin,” and finally, the testimony of Dr. Norman Haire.

The testimony of Stopes       
Stopes’ testimony was damaging to her own case for a number of reasons. The first was that she was not required to enter the witness box; it was the job of the defense to justify the defamatory statements, not for the plaintiff to rebut them. Her testimony added unnecessary risks to her own side.

Once she was in the witness box, Stopes volunteered statements which undermined her counsel’s arguments. For instance, in his opening speech, Hastings had not mentioned eugenics, yet in the examination by Hastings, Stopes brought her eugenic agenda to the fore:

The object of the Society [for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress] is, if possible, to counteract the steady evil which has been growing for a good many years of the reduction of the birth rate just on the part of the thrifty, wise, well-contented, and the generally sound members of our community, and the reckless breeding from the C.3 end [“C.3” referred to those who were rejected as being physically unfit for military service], and the semi-feebleminded, the careless, who are proportionately increasing in our community because of the slowing of the birth rate at the other end of the social scale. Statistics show that every year the birth rate from the worst end of our community is increasing in proportion to the birth rate at the better end, and it was in order to try to right that grave social danger that I embarked upon this work.

There was a chance, of course, that members of the jury might have had eugenic sympathies, but statements such as these from Stopes did increase the chance that the defense would succeed in its argument that Stopes’ work was a social experiment with eugenic goals.

When cross-examined, Stopes “took on” the defense counsel rather than focus on answering questions. When asked about why Dr. Norman Haire (a Malthusian doctor) had visited her clinic, she told the court that he had been seeking referral patients with whom he could fit the “gold pin” contraceptive device. Seeking referrals in this manner was against the code of conduct of doctors, and Haire denied he’d done so. The result was that Haire, who should have been an ideological ally of Stopes, became a hostile witness when it came time for his testimony.

Next, when cross-examined by the defense, Stopes lost her temper. That she did so was entirely understandable; she had been in the witness box for several hours and was asked a rather unclear question about viewing children as a curse in marriage. But petulantly asking if this included “an imbecile or monster or degenerate or diseased child” ultimately undermined her lawyer’s effort to depict Stopes’ work as a quiet, charitable endeavor above any criticism.

By contrast, when it came time for Sutherland to testify, he gave straightforward answers. He later wrote that he had prayed to St. Thomas More, Lord Chancellor of England, who had been executed in 1535 because he refused to renounce the Catholic faith.

When under questioning from his lawyer, Mr. Ernest Charles, KC, Sutherland described Stopes’ social experimentation as: “The indiscriminate distribution of knowledge of contraceptives amongst the poor for the purpose of attempting to redistribute the birth rate by means of artificial contraceptives and contrary to the law of nature.”

When cross-examined by Hastings, Sutherland’s continued his plain words, without embellishment or speechifying. Hastings tried to provoke him, suggesting that his book was “a violent attack upon people who believe in the Protestant faith and are not Catholics.”

The Lord Chief Justice, sensitive to the sectarian divisions of Britain at the time, intervened, saying that the “likes and dislikes about Protestantism and Roman Catholicism are not relevant to any issue in the case.”

In his testimony, Sutherland had focused on his role in the case, and left the legal argument to his lawyers. No doubt the period he spent in the witness box was an ordeal, but he had answered truthfully and had not damaged his case.

The evidence of Professor McIlroy     
The testimony of Professor Louise McIlroy was very damaging to Stopes. McIlroy was, like Stopes, a woman. Like Sutherland, she was a Catholic doctor. She disagreed with what she considered to be the Church’s out-of-date position on birth control, and dispensed contraceptives free of charge at the Royal Free Hospital for Women. McIlroy was the first female professor of gynecology at the Royal Free Hospital for Women, and she was in many ways ahead of her time. For instance, when appropriate, she would arrange for wife and husband to attend appointments together so that she could advise both spouses on contraceptive methods. She also advocated paid maternity leave for women.

McIlroy was quoted in Sutherland’s book as describing a contraceptive device used in Stopes’ clinic as “the most harmful method of which I have had experience.” The achievements and expertise she brought to her testimony in support of Sutherland’s case would prove highly effective for the defense.

The “gold pin” and the testimony of Dr. Norman Haire    
The “gold pin” was an early form of what is now known as “the coil,” a pessary inserted into the uterus for contraceptive purposes.

Stopes was interested in the pin when she heard that it was effective contraceptive. In Wise Parenthood she recommended its use to effectively sterilize “the lowest and most negligent strata of society” because, once in place, it could not removed without expert assistance. For Stopes, this was its “greatest possible racial and social value.”

There was no evidence that Stopes had used the gold pin at her clinic, but she did send two patients to Dr. Norman Haire to be fitted with the device, despite his having told her that it was dangerous. Throughout the case, Sutherland’s counsel, Mr. Charles, asked each witness what the gold pin was for. Some said that it would enhance conception. Others, that it would induce an abortion. The divided opinions of the medical profession enabled Charles to persuasively argue that the device was uncertain and therefore experimental.

Dr. Haire, displeased by Stopes’ assertion during her testimony that he had trawled her clinic for new patients to be fitted with the gold pin, testified under subpoena for the defense on February 27, 1923. His evidence against Stopes was damning. He said that the contraceptive device used by her clinic was “utterly unreliable,” that women could not fit it properly, and that, when he had fitted it in women, it had failed 24 times in 29 cases.

The verdict    
On February 28, 1923, the penultimate day of the trial, the jury was given four questions to answer.  They retired at 4 pm and returned at 7:55 pm. The foreman of the jury passed a piece of paper to the judge. On it was written their answers.

The Lord Chief Justice read from the paper. “(1) Were the words complained of defamatory of the Plaintiff?—Yes. (2) Were they true in substance and in fact?—Yes. (3) Were they fair comment?…”

At this point, the judge noticed something odd. The answer to question 3 was unclear. Handing the paper to the foreman of the jury, he said: “Would you look at that, Mr. Foreman? Two words have been written: which is the final one?” The foreman marked the paper and handed it back.

The Lord Chief Justice continued: “(3) Were they fair comment?—No. (4) Damages, if any?—£100.”

At this point, lawyers for the plaintiff and the defendant asked for judgement. Given the late hour, the Lord Chief Justice decided that arguments would be heard the following morning.

The next day, the plaintiff’s lawyers argued that they had won the case. The words complained of were defamatory and fell into two classes: statements of fact, and statements of opinion. According to the findings of the jury, while the defense had succeeded in justifying the statements of fact as true, they had failed to convince the jury that the statements of opinion were fair comment. On this basis, the plaintiff’s lawyer said that they were entitled to judgement on the findings and for damages of £100.

For the defense, Charles disagreed, arguing that the plaintiff’s lawyer could not point to a single case where the jury’s decision that the words complained of were true in substance and in fact was not the end of the matter. In other words, as soon as the jury had answered the second question “yes,” they should have stopped there. The Lord Chief Justice agreed with them.

Sutherland and his anti-eugenist supporters had won.

Stopes appealed the decision and won at the Court of Appeal 2-1, on the grounds that the judge had not adequately briefed the jury. Sutherland counter-appealed to the House of Lords, who supported him 4-1.

Why it matters      
I recently met an eminent historian of the period and we discussed eugenics. She remarked that she would have preferred to deal with the eugenists of 100 years ago to the eugenicists of today. This surprised me, so I asked her why. She replied that the eugenists of 100 years ago were forthright about their aims, while their modern counterparts obfuscate.

And she was right. The opprobrium attached to eugenics by the end of the Second World War has meant that it has become more discreet. The “Eugenics Education Society” is now the nondescript “Galton Institute.” Enthusiasts no longer talk about “Superman” or the “unfit” but of “human potential” and “viability” and the “nuchal translucency scan.” Eugenics is still with us, but hidden in plain sight.

We live in a time in which genetic science continues to advance rapidly, for good and for ill. Science is complex. It’s going to be a challenge to get people interested in highly-technical descriptions of sub-microscopic events. And even if you do get them to understand, are they going to be able to explain it to someone else?

The true story of battle between Stopes and Sutherland—as opposed to the widely-held narrative that this was a case of a noble humanitarian being persecuted by the Catholic Church—enables Catholics to reflect on their history and inspire those who will fight the battle in our era.
UNQUOTE
In the long term we lost.

 

 


Eugenic Perpetrators
Eugenics is one of things that the Lunatic Fringe thought was a splendid thing before the Second World War. Now of course they think it is quite appalling. They get upset about Racism instead. This shows they are Useful Idiots following the political agenda of Antonio Gramsci, the leading theoretician of the communist party in Italy. Here are some of the guilty.

 

H. G. Wells ex Wiki
QUOTE
Wells believed in the theory of eugenics. In 1904 he discussed a survey paper by Francis Galton, co-founder of eugenics, saying "I believe ... It is in the sterilisation of failure, and not in the selection of successes for breeding, that the possibility of an improvement of the human stock lies." Some contemporary supporters even suggested connections between the "degenerate" man-creatures portrayed in The Time Machine and Wells's eugenic beliefs. For example, the economist Irving Fisher said in a 1912 address to the Eugenics Research Association: "The Nordic race will ... vanish or lose its dominance if, in fact, the whole human race does not sink so low as to become the prey, as H. G. Wells images, of some less degenerate animal!"
UNQUOTE
I was never a fan of Wells I am happy to say. Now I know why.

 

George Bernard Shaw ex Wiki
QUOTE
Shaw asserted that each social class strove to serve its own ends, and that the upper and middle classes won in the struggle while the working class lost. He condemned the democratic system of his time, saying that workers, ruthlessly exploited by greedy employers, lived in abject poverty and were too ignorant and apathetic to vote intelligently.[57] He believed this deficiency would ultimately be corrected by the emergence of long-lived supermen with experience and intelligence enough to govern properly. He called the developmental process elective breeding but it is sometimes referred to as shavian eugenics, largely because he thought it was driven by a "Life Force" that led women—subconsciously—to select the mates most likely to give them superior children........

After visiting the USSR in the 1930s where he met Stalin, Shaw became a supporter of the Stalinist USSR. On 11 October 1931 he broadcast a lecture on American national radio telling his audience that any 'skilled workman...of suitable age and good character' would be welcomed and given work in the Soviet Union.[62] Tim Tzouliadis asserts that hundreds of Americans responded to his suggestion and left for the USSR.[63]

A recent documentary, The Soviet Story, includes an extensive clip of film in which George Bernard Shaw, facing the camera, is apparently speaking in favour of discarding those members of society 'who are no use in this world':

You must all know half a dozen people at least who are no use in this world, who are more trouble than they are worth. Just put them there and say Sir, or Madam, now will you be kind enough to justify your existence? If you can’t justify your existence, if you’re not pulling your weight in the social boat, if you’re not producing as much as you consume or perhaps a little more, then, clearly, we cannot use the organizations of our society for the purpose of keeping you alive, because your life does not benefit us and it can’t be of very much use to yourself.[64]

Shaw echoes this sentiment in the preface to his play On the Rocks (1933) writing:
UNQUOTE
He had the patter. He was fashionable. He was wrong, wrong, wrong.

 

Sidney Webb, 1st Baron Passfield ex Wiki
QUOTE
The Webbs were supporters of the Soviet Union until their deaths. Their books, Soviet Communism: A new civilization? (1935) and The Truth About Soviet Russia (1942) have been widely criticized for adopting a largely uncritical view of Stalin's conduct during periods that witnessed a brutal process of agricultural collectivization as well as extensive purges and the creation of the gulag system.[2 ]

Writings
Webb co-authored, with his wife, a pivotal book on the History of Trade Unionism (1894). References in literature
In H.G. Wells's The New Machiavelli (1911), the Webbs, as 'the Baileys', are unmercifully lampooned as short-sighted, bourgeois manipulators. The Fabian Society, of which Wells was briefly a member (1903–08), fares no better in his estimation.
UNQUOTE
The Webbs were fools or rogues. In fact they may even have been both.

 

 

Errors & omissions, broken links, cock ups, over-emphasis, malice [ real or imaginary ] or whatever; if you find any I am open to comment.

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Updated  on  Friday, 05 January 2024 13:13:38